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Juhuri

Горско-еврейский

Juhuri, also called Judeo-Tat, is a Southwest Iranian (Tat) language spoken by the Caucasian, or Mountain, Jews who call themselves Juhuro or (in Russian) Kavkazi Evrei, Gorsky Evrei.
A Mother's Love - Juhuri
Simon's Story - Juhuri
Imid (Hope) - Juhuri
Traditional Life - Juhuri
Hanukkah - Juhuri
Yakov's Story - Juhuri
Holidays - Juhuri

Until recent decades, Juhuri speakers were concentrated primarily in the towns and villages on the eastern slopes of the Caucasus mountains. Today, with a global population estimated between 100-200,000, they live primarily in Israel and the U.S., although thousands remain in Dagestan and Azerbaijan. The Juhuri (or Judeo-Tat) language is still spoken by many middle-aged and older people, who were born in the Caucasus, and is maintained in some families and some spheres of daily life, but many have switched to Russian or English, and many of the older generation also speak Azeri.

Affiliation

Juhuri is classified by linguists as belonging to a distinct Tat branch of the Southwestern Iranian languages, closely related to Muslim Tat and, at a greater distance, to Classical, Middle, and Modern Persian, with which it is not mutually intelligible. Tajik-Israeli researcher Michael Zand has identified at least four distinct dialects spoken in Derbent, Quba, Makhachkala-Nalchik, and Vartashan (now Oguz). Influences from Hebrew are apparently manifest in the lexicon and phonology of the language, while neighboring Caucasian languages and more recently Russian have also significantly influenced the language.

Endangerment

Most Juhuri speakers are fluent, if not native speakers of Russian and often of the Azeri language of Azerbaijan as well. Young speakers in the Juhuro communities of Israel and United States are increasingly likely to speak and live in Hebrew and English, respectively. Quba, a traditional center in Azerbaijan, is reported as having one of the few Juhuro communities where the language is still being transmitted to most children. Elsewhere the language’s future is in jeopardy from the national languages where the Juhuro live and from Russian as a lingua franca between generations and communities.

Written with semi-cursive Hebrew letters until the early Soviet period, Juhuri books, newspapers, textbooks, and other materials were later printed with a Latin alphabet and finally in Cyrillic, still most common today. During the Soviet period, early official support for the language, especially in Dagestan, gave way to a policy of Russification after the 1930s. Famous poets, playwrights, and prose writers have included Yono Semyonov, Mishi Bakshiyev, and Danil Atnilov, among others. The Theater of the Eastern Caucasus, the only Juhuri-language theater in the world, was founded in Derbent in 1923 and re-established in Israel in 2001.